Content area

Abstract

Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep is a peculiar neural state showing a combination of muscle atonia and intense cortical activity. REM sleep is usually considered as a unitary state in neuroscientific research; however, it is composed of two different microstates: phasic and tonic REM. These differ in awakening thresholds, sensory processing, and cortical oscillations. Nevertheless, studies examining cortical oscillations during REM microstates are scarce, and used low spatial sampling. Here, we analyzed the data of 18 healthy individuals assessed by high-density sleep EEG recordings. We systematically contrasted phasic and tonic REM periods in terms of topographical distribution, source localization, as well as local, global and long-range synchronization of frequency-specific cortical activity. Tonic periods showed relatively increased high alpha and beta power over frontocentral derivations. In addition, higher frequency components of beta power exhibited increased global synchronization during tonic compared to phasic states. In contrast, in phasic periods we found increased power and synchronization of low frequency oscillations coexisting with increased and synchronized gamma activity. Source localization revealed several multimodal, higher-order associative, as well as sensorimotor areas as potential sources of increased high alpha/beta power during tonic compared to phasic REM. Increased gamma power in phasic REM was attributed to medial prefrontal and right lateralized temporal areas associated with emotional processing. Our findings emphasize the heterogeneous nature of REM sleep, expressed in two microstates with remarkably different neural activity. Considering the microarchitecture of REM sleep may provide new insights into the mechanisms of REM sleep in health and disease.

Details

Title
The paradox of rapid eye movement sleep in the light of oscillatory activity and cortical synchronization during phasic and tonic microstates
Author
Simor, Péter 1 ; van Der Wijk, Gwen 2 ; Gombos, Ferenc 3 ; Kovács, Ilona 3 

 Institute of Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, 1064, Budapest, Hungary; Semmelweis University, Institute of Behavioural Sciences, 1089, Budapest, Hungary 
 University of Calgary, Department of Psychology, 2500, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Cognitive Science Department, 1111, Budapest, Hungary 
 Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Department of General Psychology, 1088, Budapest, Hungary; MTA-PPKE Adolescent Development Research Group, 1088, Budapest, Hungary 
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Nov 15, 2019
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
10538119
e-ISSN
10959572
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2307694996
Copyright
©2019. Elsevier Inc.